57: Making Injera which is a sour flatbread and is used to scoop up meat and vegetable stews. Injera is made with teff, a tiny, round grain that flourishes in the highlands of Ethiopia. While teff is very nutritious, it contains practically no gluten. | Landing strip for airplanes in Jinka

58: Jinka

59: Jinka, sunset

67: Dimeka, local market

73: Scarring on her back from ritual where women, prior to marriage, are beaten with sticks to show their courage.

75: Turmi, Hamer village

79: Turmi, Hamer village

82: Turmi, waiting for the river to recede so we could drive across

83: Vulturing Guineafowl | Driving south to cross the Omo river and visit the Desenech People

101: Konso village | Konso village, generation sticks. Every 18 years control of the village moves from one generation to the next. For each change, a stick is inserted into the area beneath the tree.

102: Konso village, truth stones. If there is a conflict, people are ask to tell the truth in front of the stones. Those that lie are struck down. | Konso village, community house where unmarried boys sleep and also protect the village

103: People of Konso. Typical dress with colorful skirts

106: Konso women

107: Local herder

108: 8 year old. Both girls were alone walking on the road carrying their load. Women and girls typically carry wood and water | 11 year old

109: African Fish Eagle

110: Yellow-necked Spurfowl

111: Hooded Vulture

112: Driving to Yabello. Young girl with herd of goats | Driving to Yabello.

113: Yabello, sunset

115: Yabello, sunrise

116: Borana Village | Part of the Oromo tribe – Ethiopia’s largest ethnic group. Borana speak Oromifa. They are traditionally semi-nomadic pastoralists, who depend exclusively on their livestock for subsistence. Many Borana have adopted a veneer of Islam over a powerful traditional monotheistic religion. They frequently pray to Waq, the benign god whom they believe "sends the rain and all good things.”